tv Arts and Culture Deutsche Welle March 14, 2019 9:45am-10:01am CET
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says tells us what piece of bread has to do with the greek economy. the dutch artist has to be one of the greatest painters who ever lived and the rights museum in amsterdam has the biggest collection of his works in the world now to celebrate the three hundred fiftieth anniversary of his death the museum has for the very first time put on display the entire collection which includes of course some of the most famous rembrandt paintings of all. let's go forward march this captain seems to be calling to the men of amsterdam civil defense and the group reaches for their muskets this painting is like a snapshot capturing the dynamic of men about to mobilize it's the most famous picture in amsterdam's kikes museum the night watch by them count from a fine rubber. of genius i mean. here's one.
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few artist even with the many painters at work in the dutch republicans have gentry who can grasp you if you look at his paintings or look at his chinks they pull you in. rembrandt young and while highly talented he played with light and shadow in this self-portrait painting each individual hair. at the age of twenty two he settled in amsterdam at the time a thriving center of trade the rich merchants patricians adored him and they paid astronomical sums for his work. for the way station which at the time also housed an anatomical theatre the famous dr nicholas told commissioned the painting depicting him working with his students. the anatomy lesson of dr toilet it's a masterpiece of the use of light and dark effects. robert organizes lights
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in a painting he wants to see where you want you to see the park that's where all the lights going to be but in the area he or she will use only light colors where the further away from that area he starts introducing dark or like red eventually brown black so he really manipulates the usual paint to express the emotional impact. in the painting the prophetess anna it's the book that's highlighted this woman is able to read unusual for women in the netherlands at that time. rembrandt preferred realism to embellishing or flattering his subjects. she showed this wife of a brewer with wrinkles around her eyes and a tiny smile. in his portraits of the merchant's son martin's all moms and his fiance open cup it he emphasized their self-confidence and love of luxury.
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and he always painted himself over and over again. i think started out to. study his own troops. in front of the mirror and he's making faces like angry or carrots or. thinking. it's one of the ways to practice emotions that rembrandt's professional success could not protect him from personal tragedy his wife saskia died after the birth of their last son and only one of their four children survived. saskia had managed the finances and maintained contacts to amsterdam's high society at the end of his life rembrandt was impoverished a few years before his death he created his self-portrait as paul the apostle with
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his typically unsparing eye he depicted himself as a disillusioned old man made weary by life. extraordinary painter now guitarist dominic miller is one of those go to session musicians for some of the world's top artists he's worked with the pretenders phil collins steve winwood to name but a few but he's best known for his long association as sting's main sideman his start of playing has in fact become part of stings and members just released a new solo album and we caught up with him on his current. interview and definitely not in a hurry the notes dominic miller plays on his guitar have plenty of space between them. it's
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more of an impression of what the subject is it's like one of my favorite quotations from picasso which i use a lot in my mantra in music is you don't paint what you see you paint what you know is that. dominic miller has played with almost all the european jazz greats his new album is called absent the high proof tipple inspired more than a few artists and writers that drove some of them out but not miller. i've never tasted absinthe and i don't drink oh i'm sorry to say but i think that's all the more reason why i can create something that. that brings up those feelings you know that i want to create a high or a. kind of
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a psychedelic experience through through music that's what i'm trying to do any work. is played with staying for thirty years he says the british singer touched him the importance of breaking the rules when writing music. changing from f. major to g. minor you know the certain shifts that wouldn't make sense and music college but he can make sense of it by the way that he tells the story. dominic miller also likes to tell stories with his music he wasn't aiming to make
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a. beautiful album but rather one that reflects his experiences and they have at times been quite dark and sinister. our europe correspondent in brussels day all matters is a passionate baker has taken it upon himself to show us how to bake bread from every european union member state the age of the still twenty seven soon but we won't talk about that now today georg is going to bake piece of bread from greece and as always he'll be mixing it with a bit of local political history. europe close so much to greece you roebuck he was the lover of the ancient god of gods use and then there are the olympics democracy. even money all invented in greece with these coins you could for the first time buy
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a pita bread rather than let's say exchange of fish for it. costs two thousand five hundred years later things went all wrong and greece's pockets were empty. let's start with liquidity and the need for it two hundred nineteen billion liters to be precise one millionth of water for every billion euros in financial aid that flowed into the greek economy it's a because so the dairy the world has ever seen but that created some real pressure austerity that's a greek words to squeezing public finances like greek. it's called cold extract that's ten million liters of olive oil robinson sold nine
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grams and now comes the troika of east flour and malt. finally and and this is keen greek honey. the flavor is bittersweet after eighty years of bitter allstar rooty the bailout program is finally at an end good evening but. the problems in greece's economy still are no over though. isto requires steady meeting. a minute's one for every year of austerity in a stand mixer tough love but don't worry the loan repayment schedules all extended loan maturity is there more diplomatically called. time that's exactly what the peter doe needs now it takes twelve hours to mature at room
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temperature place the dough on a lightly floured surface. and divide it into twelve pieces. shaping each into a ball and then roll them out like those screen. reforms there's plenty to straighten out corruption. rock christie. keeping your eye on the long term goal for his young and growth and to move growth . now to a chief that's proof the dough for thirty minutes and make sure you throw in the towel like greece's finance minister foreign minister and defense minister. place to put us in the hot oven and watch them inflate after just a few minutes. just like the country's polluting civil service enjoy all the hot air coming out of it. so let's fill up our pit our
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pockets while they're still hot if you are a banker or investor stuff today kilts. for the ordinary greek on the streets a little sad seeking will do. in the end it's not all about money dreamy beaches archaeological sites and the rich flavor of greek food these some of the real treasures the ancient greek word for bread is all toast which actually means flavor if you want to know why bake one of these and find out for yourself. now if you want to have a go making up piece of bread or any of those old has baked. that. viable although you tube channel that's at youtube dot com slash d w d w you're
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the gatekeepers of europe outsourcing border controls to africa. you pays billions of euros to african countries even dictatorships. suddenly close the borders. and keep people from fleeing the continent. but does that mean solve the refugee problem. fifteen minutes on d w. entered the conflict zone come fronting the powerful my guest this week here in scotland is martin helm a deputy leader of the conservative people's pockets of his family despite cooling for blacks to leave the country few insists fuz not a racist when you see that most good the movie will support by pressing him on the field we don't want to be face to stone and we're into. conflict so fifteen
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minutes on t.w. five. six meet in the ruins morrow a. symbol of a long conflict in the philippines between the muslims and the christian population last night as fighters occupied the city center in two thousand and seventeen president to church's response was brutal. i did it or it will never again football game of. the reconquest turned into tragedy this is not the kind of freedom that we want. how did morality become a gateway to islamist terror. an exclusive report from a destroyed city. village in the sights of i.r.s.
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starts april eleventh on g.w. . this is deja vu news live from berlin the british parliament rejects leaving the e.u. with out a deal a day after saying the deal on hand as though good in a series of votes lawmakers deliver a new blow to prime minister trees and night by again treading progress of strategy and there's another vote today on delaying bricks and. also on the show our correspondent at the scene says the rescue mission is over after a building collapses and lego's school children are inside but it is.
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